73 Results for : transitory

  • Thumbnail
    A Transitory Star - The Late Bernini and his Reception: ab 69.99 €
    • Shop: ebook.de
    • Price: 69.99 EUR excl. shipping
  • Thumbnail
    The Transitory Museum: ab 10.99 €
    • Shop: ebook.de
    • Price: 10.99 EUR excl. shipping
  • Thumbnail
    Transitory Nature - Breaking Binaries for Integrated Being: ab 7.49 €
    • Shop: ebook.de
    • Price: 7.49 EUR excl. shipping
  • Thumbnail
    A Transitory Star - The Late Bernini and his Reception: ab 69.99 €
    • Shop: ebook.de
    • Price: 69.99 EUR excl. shipping
  • Thumbnail
    A Transitory Star - The Late Bernini and his Reception: ab 69.99 €
    • Shop: ebook.de
    • Price: 69.99 EUR excl. shipping
  • Thumbnail
    Sites of Modernity - Asian Cities in the Transitory Moments of Trade Colonialism and Nationalism: ab 90.99 €
    • Shop: ebook.de
    • Price: 90.99 EUR excl. shipping
  • Thumbnail
    Ephemeral Media - Transitory Screen Culture from Television to YouTube: ab 33.99 €
    • Shop: ebook.de
    • Price: 33.99 EUR excl. shipping
  • Thumbnail
    Vijay Iyer und Craig Taborn, zwei der einfallsreichsten Musiker der heutigen kreativen Musik, lernten, ihre künstlerischen Ansätze in Roscoe Mitchells Note Factory Ensemble zu verschmelzen und zu vernetzen (wie auf Mitchells 2007er Aufnahme Far Side zu hören ist). Seitdem haben Iyer und Taborn immer wieder gemeinsam Konzerte gegeben. The Transitory Poems, im März 2018 in der Franz-Liszt-Akademie, Budapest, live aufgenommen, ist ihr erstes Duoalbum.Ein Feuerwerk aus gemeinsamen Erfindungen, enthält es Stücke, die als Hommage an prägende Einflüsse angeboten werden, etwa an die Pianisten Cecil Taylor, Muhal Richard Abrams und Geri Allen sowie den Maler und Bildhauer Jack Whitten.
    • Shop: odax
    • Price: 14.79 EUR excl. shipping
  • Thumbnail
    No description.
    • Shop: odax
    • Price: 19.07 EUR excl. shipping
  • Thumbnail
    Before the advent of mass communication technology - you know, stuff like television, radio, internet, wireless, youtube, bluetooth, metro, etcetcetc, music played a much more important role in the life of your average yeoman. Not to bring up statistics, or risk any sort of regression to Music History 101 or anything, but there was indeed a time when sheet music was a hot commodity and musical literacy was more than just an after-school special aimed at increasing your adolescent statistics at being accepted into a 'good' college as some sort of stab at a page torn from the Horatio Alger copybook. In short, music was not just a hot topic, it was THE hot topic - it was what you did. I mean, imagine coming home and gathering around the piano to play the latest programmatic score hot off your Schubert subscription and then packing up to head out for choir rehearsal for the local cantata - neat! And then... well, folks like Edison and Tesla had to come around and provide the grease for the slippery slope that lead us to our current manifestation of musical culture, dominated by iPhones and ring tones, where music is a commodity at best, shuffled around as bits and bytes like sampler spoons in a sea of infinite pseudo-memes - where spectacle and explosions aren't just a garnish, they're a norm, partially produced by Bruckheimer's and Bay's, with remixes by Diddy and that guy from the Postal Service. I could go on, but hey, we're all here now so one can only hope that you get my drift. However, what if we were able to take a step back for a second and reset the clock to about 1897 or so - with the proviso that we can take our technology with us? What if programmatic song cycles were still a cultural fixation reserved for the population at large, and not just regulated to individuals concerned with the 'preservation' of culture in music libraries nested in suburban New Jersey, hoping their next cultural discovery will secure them a speaking slot at the next musicology conference, taking place just outside some other suburban music library? And what if these programmatic art-songs were presented with the same respectable grandeur as a contemporary cinematic blockbuster, equip with all the explosions, glass shattering and gruff-voiced pituitary-cases rasping 'freedom isn't free,' while suspended by one hand from an Apache helicopter above a pit of molten lava... ...or something to that extent. If you're still with me after that particular rant, then Songs of Mountains and Wetlands might right up your alley. Imagine songs inspired by nature and transitory environs, composed on custom software and analog electronics tuned to seven-limit just intonation - hyper-compressed and oversaturated to the point where all aspects of delicacy have been smoothed away into a wash of fuzzed-out static - where the smallest sound is grandiose in a post-Bruckheimerian, digital neo-Wagnerian spectacle. Where even the mundane deserves it's own twenty-minute explosion-sequence... Still hooked? Place an order for this disc! Limited to the Thinktank standard of 25 hand-assembled CD's, and priced commensurate to the current economic slump, what do you have to lose? So uh, yeah, let's be in touch!
    • Shop: odax
    • Price: 16.77 EUR excl. shipping


Similar searches: